Slippery elm trees fall victim to poachers

Bark is stripped off trees for burgeoning herbal-remedy market

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David Taylor, a forest botanist with the U.S. Forest Service and Department of Agriculture, explains how individuals cut a slippery elm tree and then strip its bark. The slippery elm has fallen victim to poachers seeking profit in the ever-popular herbal remedy market.

This slippery elm has fallen victim to thieves who tore off its bark for profit in the lucrative and burgeoning herbal-remedy market.

The gummy lining of the bark has long been used in North America, and especially Appalachia, as a soothing agent for coughs, gastrointestinal ailments and skin irritations. But now, slippery elm and other herbal products that were once used seasonally by locals are in demand by millions.

“I think that trend is going to put pressure on limited resources such as the slippery elm,” said Dr. Michael Hirt, founding director for the Center for Integrative Medicine in Tarzana, Calif.

Added John Garrison, a National Park Service spokesman for the Blue Ridge Parkway: “There’s a huge market in botanicals going into herbal medicines. Virtually everything on public lands has a market.”

$23 billion business
Dietary supplements, which include herbal remedies, are a $23 billion industry in the U.S., according to the National Institutes of Health.

Great Smoky Mountains National Park officials recently teamed up with the North Carolina Department of Agriculture to mark American ginseng roots with a permanent dye and tag them with electronic tracking devices to fight illegal picking. American ginseng is said by some to fight fatigue and stress-related ailments.

In the case of the slippery elm, officials at the U.S. Forest Service are relying on locals to alert them to illegal stripping.

Slippery elms are native to North America and can be found from Canada to Texas. Authorities say the prime season for stealing is mid-June and early July, when the bark is sticky and easy to peel.

Six people arrested
A half-dozen suspects have been arrested this summer on suspicion of poaching in the Daniel Boone Forest.

“You’ve got some old mountain boys who know the trees, know the terrain,” said Officer Barry Bishop with the U.S. Forest Service.

Since the wood has no commercial value, the stripped trees are left to die. About a dozen trees face that fate for each 50-pound sack of bark, which can fetch $150 if the stuff is dry.

“If you find enough trees, it’s not going to take long to get a few pounds,” Taylor said. “It’s a quick buck.”

While the Forest Service issues permits for the harvesting some plants, such as ginseng, it does not allow any type of bark removal.

On list of protected trees
The demand for the bark has landed the tree on a protection list kept by the Ohio-based National Center for the Preservation of Medicinal Herbs, a nonprofit organization that researches safe ways to grow and replenish medicinal plants, such as ginseng, blood root and black cohosh.

Armando Gonzalez-Stuart, a researcher at the University of Texas El Paso/Austin Cooperative Pharmacy Program, said the herbal industry should cultivate slippery elms on private property and harvest the bark in a way that preserves the trees.

Most of the ginseng in the United States is cultivated for herbal products at private farms in Wisconsin, Gonzalez-Stuart said. Similarly, gingko biloba — which is promoted as a memory enhancer and a treatment for circulatory disorders — is being grown by companies in Wyoming.